April Gardening Journal

in #gardening6 years ago (edited)

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This spring came a touch early and strangly for us in The Netherlands... first we had some unseasonably hot weather, which made some of our plants come up early... followed by a strangely cold blast... including SNOW! We live in strange climatic times....

Anyway, this sort of weather combined with the fact that recently had our house remortared, meant that we had a great deal of post winter garden recovery to do. The mortaring of the house involves drilling out most of the the old mortar and then refilling it with the new mortar between the bricks... but it means that all the concrete dust spreads everywhere! Plus, it rained soon afterwards... which made the dust conceal into a bit of a hard slurry.....

Anyway, I'm going to do my best to describe what I'm doing... I'm no gardener, so I'm not sure what half the plants are called... my wife chooses, and I dig and plant... ask no questions!

The Chaos

Luckily my neighbour had an industrial vacuum cleaner that I could use for the outdoors... so, the first order of the month was an attempt clean all the concrete out from the roofs, pavement, garden and grass.... Seriously, it is everywhere... I have also washed the windows several times, and I'm still finding stuff on the wood.

I had a great afternoon vacuuming the grass.. I'm sure the neighbours and passersby all had a good laugh... me on my knees, with a loud vaccum cleaner... trying to break up the concrete chunks with the metal tool, and then vacuum up all the debris plus a healthy dose of the soil as well....

The workmen weren't so gentle with the wall attachments either! Basically just shearing through all the fasteners instead of removing them with a screwdriver! Bastards!

... on the other side of the shed, I'm wasn't sure if this grape vine had seen it's last summer....

The State of the (Back) Garden

So... after a bit an uncommonly handyman moment... I did manage to reattach the trellises... and actually do a better job of them than when I first had them up (or just stuck half heartedly in the ground....

As you can see, both climbing plants are doing pretty well... getting more sun after being raised up again and having a good watering... with more water getting to the roots instead of being siphoned away by a hard layer of concrete dust.

Moving clockwise around the garden, I had uprooted a plant in this spot... a sad casualty of the winter. Which means that we have a bit of space for something else... in the past, we had grown some beans here... but my wife wants to have a smallish sort of tree (apple?) or something that can be trained up onto a lattice to give us a bit of privacy from the neighbour. (We like them... but it is still nice to have some private space in your own back yard!).

However, this plant will also grow into a small (no higher than two metres) tree... so, if there is a tree in the previous spot then this would have to move before it gets too big for me to move by myself. So, I'm leaning towards a climber and a trellis!

This is the hedge that has been here since we moved it (and it is the only survivor from our renovating of the back yard!)... we do love it... it does get a bit thin in the lower right, as it doesn't quite get enough Sun there.... but otherwise, it does stay pretty full in the warmer months. It probably is time for me to start trimming it soon. There has been an internal request to let the top grow a touch higher, perhaps maybe 10-20 cm higher. I also have to look a bit at the gate, the latch doesn't quite catch properly.... but the gate doesn't swing open anyway, so it isn't really a huge problem.... so not really on the top of the list of things to do!

In front of the hedge, we have these two plants... the first is this sort of ball like bundle of flowers that come in pink and blue (and perhaps white?).... I can't remember what it is called... but it is pretty common. The second (I'm also not sure what it is called!) is a surprise survivor from the concrete workers... they had dumped a heavy tool on it, and it was broken in several places... we really didn't think it was going to mend and thrive... but here it is!

In this far corner, we have a little cherry tree... which will soon be competing for water with the large tree right next to it..... again, it is a tree that won't grow too big. We would like a little bit of cover in our garden, but we really don't have the space for anything large (actually, our neighbour also doesn't... his tree keeps dumping pine needles into our garden and the other neighbour complains that it shades their garden... and it is starting to do damage to the fence.... Sigh.....

Unfortunately, the cherry tree does keep getting infested with these black aphids (luizen)... we still can't figure out why... so we dutifully keep spraying it to get rid of the colonies... any tips here would be really appreciated!

Moving around again in the clockwise direction brings us to our little blackberry plants (there are three)... which we are hoping to train into a cover on the fence behind... this will be their second summer (we planted them last spring), and so far they are doing well... they did bear a little bit of fruit last year... but we will try and fertilise them correctly this year to see if they can produce better quality fruit.

Sadly... another non-survivor.... this was a red leaf Japanese maple(?) tree. Over the last summer, it seemed to have had some problems with the leaves shriveling up... perhaps we planted it in a spot that was too sunny? Anyway, we will give it a month or two to see if it will recover... there are some spots that still feel alive, but most of it is definitely dead. Anyway, this gives us a great deal of empty ground from here to the cherry tree... which we will have to think about. A place that does get quite a lot of afternoon sun....

... and finally we make it around to the last bit of garden land before returning to the pavement. This is the mixed herbs (rosemary and thyme) and lavender patch... when we planted them, we had them quite seperate... they seem to enjoy each others company and have really intermingled quite a bit. So, we'll leave them like that.... plus, there is a bit more room for something else!

Last and not least... the grass has recovered after a good few days of watering and a generous application of fertiliser.... this area used to be concrete when we bought the place... but we took half of it out, and replaced it with grass... much nicer and much much cooler! However, it does mean that I have to break out the lawn-mower on occasion... still, I'm happy that the grass has recovered from it's very very patchy state... it made all that vacuuming worthwhile!

Coming Plans

The major project for this year is the renovation of the front garden... which is in total disarray... with unkempt plants and dead plants and still a good covering of concrete dust... plus mossy tiles and bricks... it also gets some back-handed remarks from the old couple down the street when they pass by... along the lines of... "great that the garden takes care of itself..."... on an unrelated topic... I heard that if you had a clean record, you can possibly get away with one murder in your life... maybe that is an urban myth....

We are thinking of making more grass here.... and completely revamping the plants (not pictured...). Plus, maybe a half underground bike shelter... which would free up the garage for a possible future extension of the house! Anyway, these are the plans... my wife was looking into it... but I suspect we've missed the train for this summer... and we will need to postpone this until next summer....

In the short term... in the back garden, it will be choosing some new plants to enter the dead spaces (plus removing out the dead or unwanted plants....). Followed by a good general manuring of the garden beds... this year, we will use special plant food for the grape vine and the blackberry bushes... to see if it makes a difference to their fruit!

Meanwhile, these guys are still safe and asleep for the end of the year.....


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You must really be enjoying the warmer weather, your climbing plants look so healthy. But with the warmer weather comes the bugs! Very frustrating, best to ask your nursery for advice on a good product before it spreads! Enjoy gardening:)

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Yes, the growing season is fun... To see what sort of things survived and to have a chance to renew other parts!

It's so disheartening to have people come in to do some work and destroy things! Glad your vining plants recovered and your lawn! Amazing what some TLC can do!

TLC and a heap of munure and water! But I'm happy they recovered!

So good to see plants growing right now. Its normal that some survived and some not, we can only try our best. Thanks for sharing your wonderful garden @bengy!

The losses are a chance to try out new ideas!

That's a wonderful and positive thought my friend.

Rub some petroleum jelly on the tree stems. Ants and aphids are not strong enough to walk over the goop. It also protects the wood and moisturizes the cambium, making more buds and healthier leaves. Little trick I learned from steem friend who gardens in hot Venezuela.

Thanks for sharing your garden photos and progress. The vines are exploding with energy!

Thanks for that little trick! I will try it out to see if it works!

Looking good. It's amazing what happens with a little sunlight and water in the right places. Sorry no suggestions on aphids here 😔 My entomology is severely lacking hehe.

I was going to suggest asking @simplymike, but it looks like she's already come to the rescue 😊

Yes, two suggestions so far from the comments... Both better than my idea of a flamethrower... But only marginally...

Finally I get to see the famous bulbs. Not in the right place yet, lol, but this was step 1. Put a reminder in your phone so you remember to plant them this year ;0P

You've done a great job. Those trellis climbers look beatiful.

To get rid of aphids, you have a couple of options: let a one or 2 climbing nasturtium plants grow in/next to the tree, or grow some calendula flowers in small containers and hang them in the branches of the tree. You cojld also spray with a garlic/neem dillution every two weeks.orget some ladybugs in the store and release them on the tree.

Aphids are a sign that your tree is not in perfect shape, so you could go to a localgarden cenger to get your soil check. Maybe a bit more/less fertilizer could do the trick...

So glad you could make it in time this month - even though the flowers-to-become are still in the storage room instead of the ground, lol (btw, same here. 2 years ago, I bought bulbs to make the front yard look a little more colorful. Haven't planted themyet either, lol)

Ha, I will try those climbers for the tree.... I have programmed my wife to nag at me at the right time for the bulbs... Although, I'm not sure why she doesn't put them in!

I assume she thinks it is just too much fun to rub it in every once in a while, lol

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Looks wonderful😎 I hope you have lots of nice weather to enjoy it

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Sadly... no, the weather turned really bad this week! Cold, windy and rainy!

We had snow yesterday. Only a few flakes, but even so!!!

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Hope your plants didn't get frostbitten!,

So far, so good! We don't have a garden just an area out the front of the house. The stone from the house seems to radiate enough warmth to keep our plants alive during overnight frosts

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What a lovely garden, but where are all the canvas and vinyl? You definitely are working on the aesthetics more than I am.

Ha ha... But yours looks like a real serious food production centre!,

Ha ha... But yours looks
Like a real serious food
Production centre!,

                 - bengy


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Again! I'm becoming a poet!

Wow, what an enormous amount of work. I have a tiny garden and get frustrated at how long things take, you've got so much more space than me!

I don't know, this sort of size is a manageable one... with smaller sizes, I find that I just don't know what to trim and pick to make it fit! That said, a much larger garden would require just too much work, unless you planned it such that it mostly took care of itself!

I really enjoyed this post, @bengy. You really transformed your garden from something dry and unkempt to a happy garden that is ready to burst into life for the warm months. I think we have somewhat similar weather patterns here in Minnesota, though we are a week or two behind you in the emergence of spring. We also had a warm bout followed by snow and cold. I’m still wearing gloves a winter coat to all outdoor activities. It is supposed to warm up and get nice this weekend at last.

Crazy weather... I hope not too much of your garden was tricked to come out by the warm weather before being hit by the second winter!